2025 Was the Year Governments Went to War With Weed Without Saying So

Main Hemp Patriot
7 Min Read

In 2025, cannabis policy did not move in a straight line toward legalization. It got stranger.

A bunch of governments went after the edges of the cannabis universe. Not the plant, not the users, not the actual harms. They went after the accessories, the imagery, the loopholes, the chemistry, the entire culture.

Some of these bans were predictable if you follow the politics. Others were so strange you almost have to reread the headline.

Taken together, they reveal something bigger. A global shift toward regulating cannabis by controlling its interfaces: what it looks like, how it is sold, how it is advertised, what molecule it “counts as,” and which marketplace is allowed to touch it.

Gujarat, India: A rolling paper ban that treats papers like contraband

In mid December, Gujarat announced an immediate ban on the storage, sale, and distribution of rolling papers and pre-rolled cones, citing health risks and concerns about youth use, including claims that the papers were being used to smoke narcotics such as weed and charas.

This is not a cannabis ban. It is a ban on a tool that can be used for tobacco or cannabis, and it lands like a moral panic wrapped in public health language.

The message is simple: if you cannot stop the behavior, remove the object that makes the behavior easy.

Galicia, Spain: Six-figure fines for a leaf on a lighter

In Galicia, a new law framed as protecting minors and preventing addictive behaviors includes sweeping restrictions touching alcohol, energy drinks, vaping, tobacco, and cannabis, but the cannabis piece gets unusually punitive in a very specific way.

Among the behaviors deemed punishable are promoting cannabis in spaces accessible to minors and giving away or selling merchandise with cannabis imagery such as lighters, shirts, or other items. Reported penalties can reach well into six figures.

Whatever one thinks about youth protection, the proportionality is what stands out. The law does not simply regulate use. It polices symbols.

The United States: The hemp ban and the art of loophole surgery

If Gujarat banned papers and Galicia targeted imagery, the United States went after a category.

In November, Congress and President Trump enacted the FY2026 Agriculture appropriations act, quietly rewriting the federal definition of hemp in ways that reimpose restrictions on a wide range of hemp-derived products.

The impact is massive. The booming market for intoxicating hemp products that emerged after the 2018 Farm Bill now faces an uncertain future. This was not a public debate about legalization. It was a technical change buried inside a must-pass bill, with consequences that extend into 2026.

It fits the pattern perfectly. Not banning cannabis directly, but redefining what hemp is allowed to be.

Ireland: When chemistry becomes the target

Ireland offers a different variation of the same approach. In mid 2025, the government moved to classify HHC and related compounds as controlled drugs through a fast-track scheduling process.

This is what happens when regulators feel they are losing the naming game. If the market keeps inventing cannabinoids that are not technically THC, governments respond by banning entire chemical families.

Italy: Hemp flower as a public order problem

Italy’s crackdown on hemp flower escalated sharply in 2025, with new restrictions treating legal hemp inflorescences as a public safety concern. The move triggered legal questions at the EU level and threatened an entire sector that had operated in a gray but tolerated zone.

This was not about recreational cannabis legalization. It was about collapsing the narrow space where hemp flower and CBD-adjacent commerce had been allowed to exist.

Thailand: Legalization followed by a slow squeeze

Thailand provides another telling example. After its high-profile move toward decriminalization, the country began pulling cannabis back into a tightly regulated framework.

In 2025, cannabis flower was reclassified as a controlled herb, with new restrictions on sales, advertising, and access. Penalties now include fines and potential jail time.

It was not a return to the old war on drugs language. It was something quieter and more administrative. Control without the rhetoric.

This has happened before

If all of this feels familiar, it should.

In the 1990s and early 2000s, the United States ran a similar playbook. When direct enforcement against cannabis stalled, authorities turned their attention to paraphernalia. Head shops were raided. Glass was seized. Rolling papers became legal liabilities. Mail-order businesses were prosecuted.

Operation Pipe Dreams culminated in arrests across the country and sent Tommy Chong to prison for selling bongs. It was an era defined not by the plant itself, but by the effort to erase the culture around it.

Josh Kesselman built RAW in the shadow of that period. High Times survived it. The industry adapted, even as the law tried to suffocate the tools that made cannabis visible.

The difference now is not the tactic. It is the language. What was once called a war on drugs is now framed as public health, youth protection, or regulatory clarity.

The pattern is clear

By the end of 2025, a pattern had emerged.

  • Accessories became targets.
  • Symbols became punishable.
  • Formats were restricted.
  • Loopholes were closed.
  • Molecules were scheduled.
  • Markets were squeezed.
  • Visibility was reduced.

The logic is consistent. As cannabis becomes more normalized socially, governments attempt to shrink the space around it, especially the parts that are visible, cultural, or difficult to control.

They are not always banning weed.

They are banning the idea of weed.

Photo: Shutterstock

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